You Wreck Me
Mary Jane's Last Dance
American Dream Plan B
Into the Great Wide Open
Forgotten Man
I Won't Back Down
Free Fallin'
Fault Lines
Tweeter and the Monkey Man (Traveling Wilburys cover) - 10 minutes version
U Get Me High
Rebels (acoustic)
Two Gunslingers (acoustic)
??? (acoustic)
Yer So Bad (half acoustic)
Learning to Fly (half acoustic)
Shadow People
I Should Have Known It
Refugee
Runnin' Down a Dream

Don't Come Around Here No More
American Girl

I would describe myself as a casual Tom Petty fan who wouldn't have traveled to see this concert but when a legend actually comes to Boise, you sort of have to go. Not to mention that my wife and I usually hate each other's music but everybody likes Tom Petty so we could go together.

I hadn't bought a Petty album since Into The Great White Open way back in '91 and had completely lost touch with anything he has done since then. I expected a greatest hits show where only ancient people like me would be in attendance but got something quite different. The hotties who must have been barely old enough to drink sitting next to me were the most obvious sign that Tom appeals to all ages. Petty played a lot of new songs and not near as many hits as I was expecting. I guess he has confidence in his new album since he mentioned this new album was the first one he ever did that went to #1 on Billboard. I found that amazing but I will take his word for it.

There was too much acoustic stuff for me but I really liked the Traveling Wilburys song he did before all the acoustic stuff started. The new stuff sounded good, Petty did the cool thing of giving away his new album to all ticket buyers and I wish I would have listened to it before this concert and I will definitely give it a chance now. The songs are longer than his older stuff but in a good way, giving Campbell more room to solo is usually a good thing.

The whole band sounded good and fortunately with the singing style he has, Petty's old age doesn't affect it drastically, not like Rush where Geddy really has trouble singing live now. The show was long, maybe 2.5 hours. It's good to see a group giving their all, even if I think it actually should have been shortened a little bit.

So to sum up my long review, I would actually not recommend this tour to the casual fan who only wants to hear the old hits. Listen to his new album and definitely go if you like it. Fortunately I like what I have heard of it so I enjoyed the show.

Yes, Geddy can't hit the high notes but he sounds great every time I see him. Not sure why everyone rips on his voice. I saw Tom only once and I think Geddy buries him as a live singer. Just from my experiences, no big deal.

The new album has twelve songs and he played five of them. Not exactly shoving it down people's throats. The new album did go to number one on the billboard charts. So, it seems the fans do have interest in the new material and i'm sure as the tour goes on, more songs will get played from it because of that.

Surprisingly, Don't Do Me Like That isn't a song they play that often. I can't figure out why someone would only like that song and not be a fan of Petty's other material though.